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| [Nettime-bold] Michael Pastore: The End of the Web as We Know It |
http://cyberatlas.internet.com/big_picture/applications/article/
May 17, 2001
The End of the Web as We Know It
By Michael Pastore
Less than 60 percent of the households in the United States,
the world's most wired country, have Internet access, but
already the CEO of Forrester Research is predicting the death
of the World Wide Web and the dawn of a new,
application-based Internet.
No one doubts that Internet usage has boomed, but most of the
access to this point has been through e-mail and Web
browsers. But Forrester predicts the Web's days are numbered
as the Internet will move to a second round of expansion
beyond the browser. Two new waves of innovation -- which
Forrester calls the "X Internet" -- will eclipse the Web: an
executable Net that greatly improves the online experience,
and an extended Net that connects the real world.
"The problem with today's Internet is that it's dumb, boring
and isolated," said George F. Colony, CEO and chairman of
Forrester. "News, sports and weather imparted on static Web
pages offer essentially the same content presented on paper,
which makes the online experience more like reading in a
dusty library than participating in a new medium. Now that
the novelty has faded, business executives and consumers are
going back to reading newspapers and watching TV. Ultimately,
the Net hasn't truly become a part of our real worlds."
The first stage of Forrester's X Internet is an executable
Net, which will allow users to get real-time, interactive
experiences over the Net through disposable code -- programs
they use once and throw away -- downloaded to their PCs and
handheld devices. These quick downloads will allow users to
carry on extended conversations with Net services, a stark
contrast to today's transactional Web services.
"Today, users are trapped in Web-only thinking," said Carl D.
Howe, research director and principal analyst at Forrester.
"It's a little like the early days of television when
programming was just radio with pictures of announcers. But
executable applications will give users tools to experience
the Net in more entertaining and engaging ways. For example,
imagine a corporate buyer navigating a virtual marketplace
with a Doom-like user interface -- buyers could simply shoot
the deals they want. That's a far cry from today's Web."
Forrester also foresees an extended Internet emerging through
online devices and applications that sense, analyze and
control the real world. Thanks to inexpensive chips and a
worldwide Internet backbone, nearly every device that runs on
electricity will have an Internet connection, using both
wired and wireless networks. By 2010, Forrester predicts the
number of Internet devices will boom from today's 100 million
to more than 14 billion.
"The extended Internet will reshape technology's role in
business," Howe said. "Most firms struggle to understand and
act upon what is happening in their business now -- they're
lucky if they know what happened last week or last month.
Extended Internet devices will provide real-time information
about what is going on and provide knobs and levers for
companies to control their businesses. A data center business
in California might combine real-time data from both the
power company and customers to reduce the power consumption
of their air conditioners when power demand peaks -- all
through extended Internet devices."
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